Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 12 | Page 12

PUBLIC HEALTH MEASLES REEMERGING IN THE US Physicians Urged to Recommend Immunization to Parents and to Consider Measles Diagnosis Lori Caloia, MD I t’s back and it’s back with a vengeance! Measles was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000 thanks to a highly effective vaccination program that began in 1963. Yet this year, the CDC reports that there had already been 228 new measles cases as of March 7. Measles outbreaks of three or more cases have been reported in five states including Washington, New York, Texas, Illinois and California. Seven other states, including Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Oregon, have also seen measles cases. As of March 7, Louisville has not had any measles cases. Kentucky’s sole case involved an unvaccinated child living in the south-central part of the state who had traveled outside the United States. It is frustrating that measles has reemerged largely because of pockets of unvaccinated populations throughout the country and because anti-vaxxer parents, urged on by social media disinforma- 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE tion about unsafe vaccines, are not immunizing their children. As people travel outside the United States to countries where measles is prevalent and then return home, or when unvaccinated inter- national travelers visit our country, the disease has the chance to spread among those who have not been immunized. At least part of the problem can be traced to a fraudulent and now totally debunked 1998 study by Andrew Wakefield, a British physician who has since been stripped of his license to practice medicine. After he linked the MMR vaccine to autism, the disin- formation was spread in the US by celebrities like Jenny McCarthy and through social media. In January, YouTube announced that it would no longer rec- ommend videos that violate its community guidelines, including “content that could misinform users in harmful ways” and, in Feb- ruary, Facebook said it was considering making anti-vaccination content on its site less visible in the face of new measles outbreaks and mounting congressional criticism of Facebook. Measles is one of our most contagious diseases and MMR is one